Temperature and frequency dependence of conduction along sympathetic preganglionic axons
Halder, M.; Hochman, S.
Show abstract
Sympathetic preganglionic neurons (SPNs) distribute signals widely across paravertebral ganglia, yet the reliability of spike propagation along their predominantly unmyelinated axons remains poorly defined. We examined temperature- and activity-dependent modulation of SPN axonal conduction using an ex vivo adult mouse thoracic sympathetic chain preparation. Population compound action potentials (CAPs) were evoked by supramaximal stimulation of T10 ventral roots and recorded from branching axons in interganglionic compared to unbranching axons in the splanchnic nerve. At physiological temperature (36{degrees}C), scaled CAP magnitude was reduced by [~]50% relative to 22{degrees}C, with preferential loss of slower-conducting axonal components. These reductions are consistent with substantial temperature-dependent decreases in effective axonal recruitment, likely reflecting conduction failure in a large fraction of SPNs. Losses were more pronounced in interganglionic pathways, suggesting increased vulnerability in branching projections. To assess activity-dependent effects, stimuli were delivered at 1, 5, and 20 Hz with focus on 5 and 20 Hz stimulus trains (20s duration). The overall time-course of train-evoked depression was similar across temperatures; however, the underlying axonal populations differed. At 22{degrees}C, slower-conducting axons exhibited marked frequency-dependent depression, whereas at 36{degrees}C the remaining faster-conducting axons displayed facilitation, particularly at 20 Hz. Slower-conducting responses also showed post-train potentiation at physiological temperature. These findings indicate that SPN axonal conduction is not uniformly reliable and is strongly modulated by temperature and activation history. Preferential vulnerability of slow-conducting, likely small-diameter and branching axons identifies axonal conduction as a physiologically regulated site of gain control in sympathetic output.
Matching journals
The top 8 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.